|
|
New Hampshire�s Political Lineup
|
1991 |
2001 |
Governor |
R |
D |
State
Senate |
13R, 11D |
11D,
13R |
State
House |
269R, 127D, 2I, 2
vacant |
256R, 140D, 1I, 3
vacant |
US
Senators |
2R |
2R |
US
Reps |
1D, 1R |
2R | |
Redistricting
Deadline
No specific
date. |
Who�s in Charge of
Redistricting?
The legislature, specifically, the
House Election Law Committee and Senate Executive Departments and
Administration Committee. Also, the New Hampshire Constitution
places strict limits on redistricting plans; legislative districts
must be contiguous and not split towns or city wards. The governor
has veto power over both plans.
|
Districting
Principles
Principle |
Congressional
|
State
Legis. |
Compactness |
+ |
|
Contiguity |
+ |
|
Political
subdivisions |
+ |
|
Communities of
interest |
|
|
Cores of prior
districts |
|
|
Protect
incumbents |
|
|
VRA � 5 |
|
|
+
= required
- =
prohibited |
Public Access
Public hearings are held in each county and
are well advertised in newspapers. Maps are also made available to
the public.
|
Political Landscape
Traditionally
a solid Republican state, New Hampshire has become more Democratic recently -- Bob Dole
won only 39% of the vote in the 1996
presidential race. All of its federal offices are
currently held by Republicans, but both congressional districts are competitive,
and either could lean Democratic with an infusion of only slightly
more Democratic voters. Statehouse Republicans do not have much room to change
the district lines, as a pickup of Republican voters
from one district would take them from the other competitive district.
Governor Jeanne Shaheen is a Democrat. It is likely, then,
that newly drawn districts will not differ much from current
districts.
|
Legal Issues
Members of the New Hampshire state
legislature challenged that body's method of rounding numbers to
ascertain the number of representatives required to represent each
multimember district. The State Supreme Court found that the
legislature had not violated the state constitution and did not
abuse its
discretion.
Preclearance is required under the Voting Rights Act
in some parts of the state with Native American populations.
|
Irregularly Shaped
District None. |
Contact Information
Grant Bosse Senior Legislative
Assistant New Hampshire House Majority Office 107 North Main
Street Concord, NH 03301 (603) 271-3661 (603) 271-3309
fax [email protected] |
For more information:
National Committee for an Effective Congress' Redistricting
Resource: New Hampshire -Overview
EMILY's List Congressional Redistricting Report: New
Hampshire -Overview -New
Hampshire Redistricting Chronicle
Glossary
Redistricting
Provisions 2000
|